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Generation Rent and the (In)ability to ‘Settle Down’ HSA Annual Conference

Generation Rent and the (In)ability to ‘Settle Down’ HSA Annual Conference Thursday 7 th April 2016 Jennifer Hoolachan, Kim McKee, Tom Moore & Adriana Soaita. Outline. Policy context Theoretical frameworks Methodology Key Findings Conclusions. Policy Context (Scotland).

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Generation Rent and the (In)ability to ‘Settle Down’ HSA Annual Conference

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  1. Generation Rent and the (In)ability to ‘Settle Down’ HSA Annual Conference Thursday 7th April 2016 Jennifer Hoolachan, Kim McKee, Tom Moore & Adriana Soaita

  2. Outline • Policy context • Theoretical frameworks • Methodology • Key Findings • Conclusions

  3. Policy Context (Scotland) • Homeownership: difficult to secure a mortgage without a substantial deposit • Social housing: shrinking sector that has become residualised • Growing PRS • Young people (16-34) constitute a significant proportion of PRS tenants Source: CASD (2014)

  4. Theoretical Frameworks • Youth transitions • Leave education, enter employment • Leave parental home for independent living • Get married and start a family • Socially constructed meanings of ‘home’ • Ontological security • Exercise control (autonomy) • Positive self identity

  5. Private Renting • Short-assured tenancies (Scotland) • Landlord can end the tenancy at contractual breaks • Contracts typically last for 6-12 months • Rents are unregulated and charged at market rates • Additional issues: • Landlord inspections • Repairs, poor conditions and ‘revenge evictions’ • Unable to decorate/personalise

  6. So… • In their transition to adulthood, young people may struggle to gain secure accommodation • This is particularly the case if they rent privately • They may also struggle to enjoy the qualities of ‘home’

  7. Methodology • Qualitative investigation • Two studies: • Mind the (Housing) Wealth Gap (Leverhulme) • Housing Generation Rent (Carnegie)

  8. Participants • Study 1: • 25 young people aged 18-35 • Edinburgh, North Lanarkshire, Scottish Borders • 12 semi-structured telephone interviews & 4 online focus groups (n=13) • Study 2: • 19 key-actors with professional knowledge • 11 voluntary and private organisations • Plus Aberdeen City, Dundee, Fife, Scottish Borders • 16 semi-structured interviews (telephone or face-to-face

  9. Key Finding 1 • ‘Settling down’, tenure insecurity & frustration “I feel particularly frustrated with having been in rented accommodation for so long and having to move on every year – it’s difficult to put down roots and it’s just got really expensive.”

  10. Key Finding 2 • Concern about starting a family in PRS “We do want to have a family, we do want to get married, there are not going to be any of those things unless we have a solid house! If we rented, I could be 8 months pregnant and get a Notice to Quit and be exited out, next month! […] And I suppose there is lots of things, can you even make it your own? […] it is somebody else’s home and we are just living there!”

  11. Key Finding 3 • Housing unaffordability and precarity “The thing that really gets on my nerves is the renting trap […] With rent being so high and bills and things, you don’t have the opportunity to get out of that. I like to emphasise I hate renting, I think it is money down the drain […] I hate to think of the thousands and thousands that was just thrown into someone else’s pocket! That really aggravates me.”

  12. Key Finding 4 • Double disadvantage of housing and income insecurity “How are you supposed to meet anyone and actually form this wonderful [family] life, if you are always moving from place to place? […] you’re expected to up and move all the time and shift from place to place…It is just insane!”

  13. Conclusions • Young people want to feel ontologically secure and in control of their home • PRS does not often provide these qualities of home • This leads to frustration and concern about being unable to ‘settle down’ which has implications for a young person’s transition to adulthood

  14. But… • Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Bill • Removes the ‘no fault’ ground for ending tenancies • Introduction of housing tribunal • Issues remain – rent levels, landlord behaviours, inability to decorate.

  15. Thank you @StAndrewsCHR @Jen_2603 @kim_mckee @Tom_Moore85

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